Are You Addicted To Your Activities?
by: Margaret Paul, Ph.D.
Activities - such as sports, creative projects, reading,
work, TV, meditation - can be a wonderful way to relax, express
yourself, or connect to yourself. Or they can be an addiction. How can
you know the difference?
- Angie would surf the channels whenever she felt stressed or alone.
- Karen would lose herself in a book when things felt overwhelming.
- Keith would retreat and meditate when his wife wanted to talk.
- Patty’s work schedule left her little time at home.
- Carl spent more time in the garage fixing things than with his family.
- Patrick’s love of running was interfering with his family time.
Whether or not an activity is an addiction depends upon your INTENT.
- When the intent of an activity is to avoid the pain of aloneness and loneliness, it is an addiction.
- When the intent of an activity is to avoid the pain of rejection or the fear of domination, it is an addiction.
- When the intent of an activity is to put off doing something you don’t really want to do but need to do, it is an addiction.
Whenever an activity is used as a way to avoid something -
painful feelings, difficult or boring tasks - it becomes an addiction.
It’s really no different than using substances such alcohol, drugs, or
food to avoid painful feelings or challenging tasks. The problem with
using addictions to avoid painful feelings is that the feelings don’t
actually go away. They are just numbed for the moment but are silently
eroding one’s sense of self. We can get away with it only for so long
before it shows up in some way - illness, divorce, depression, and so
on. And avoiding tasks means that the tasks pile up, eventually causing
the very stress we want to avoid. Our society is filled with ways to
avoid. Yet it is avoidance that leads to the very feelings we are
striving to avoid!
When the intent of an activity is to take loving care of
yourself by providing yourself with fun, creativity and expression,
relaxation, personal growth, spiritual growth, physical health and
well-being, then it is a loving action rather than an addiction. It all
depends on your INTENT.
Next time you want to participate in your favorite
activity, you might want to notice your intent. Do you want to relax
and watch TV or are you avoiding some difficult feeling or task? Do you
find yourself scheduling more work than you can really handle to avoid
dealing with aloneness, loneliness, or conflict with a mate, or are you
really loving your work and feeling fulfilled by it? Are you exercising
to support your health or to avoid feelings?
Once you become aware of using an activity to avoid, here’s what you can do about it:
- Welcome the feeling you are trying so hard to avoid.
Pay attention to the feeling - fear, loneliness, aloneness, agitation,
boredom, anxiety.
- Make a decision to learn what YOU might be doing to cause this feeling rather than continuing to avoid it.
- Explore what you might be doing to cause this
feeling. How are you not taking care of yourself that is causing your
painful feeling? Are you procrastinating, judging yourself, or not
standing up for yourself in conflict? How are you avoiding
responsibility for your own well-being? Are you allowing yourself to be
a victim, waiting for someone else to make you feel better?
- Once you understand what you are doing to
cause your distress, then you need to ask “What would be the loving
action for myself?” You are asking this question of your highest self,
or of your spiritual guidance if you are connected with a source of
guidance. If you open to learning about what is loving, ideas will pop
into your mind.
- Now you need to take the loving action on your
own behalf - complete a task, stand up for yourself and speak your
truth with someone, and so on.
- Re-evaluate how you are feeling. Are you
feeling more peaceful and more powerful? You will feel more peaceful if
you have taken the loving action. If you are not feeling better, don’t
just turn back to your addictions. Look for another loving action until
you find what really makes you feel safe on a deep level, not just the
temporary pacification of an addiction.
You will find your addictions fading away as you learn to take loving care of yourself.
About the Author
Margaret Paul, Ph.D. is the best-selling author and co-author of eight
books, including "Do I Have To Give Up Me To Be Loved By You?" She is
the co-creator of the powerful Inner Bonding healing process. Learn
Inner Bonding now! Visit her web site for a FREE Inner Bonding course:
http://www.innerbonding.com or
mailto:margaret@innerbonding.com. Phone sessions available.